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There comes a time in everyone's life, when
full disclosure is of the essence. For a restaurant scout, this
nasty procedure is prescribed when writing a report of a restaurant
owned by a friend. The matter is nasty both ways. If the report is
even slightly negative, it could cost a friendship; and if it is
positive, it will have less credence with the readers.
I've known Michael Sniatowsky for close to 20
years. Sniatowsky, a peripatetic entrepreneur, went into the
restaurant business three years ago, by opening Koji's Kaizen, which
became an instant favourite of Montreal sushiphiles.
Fortunately, there was no need to write a
full story on Kaizen, because the late and great Helen Rochester had
already lionized it, naming it one of her best of the year in 1995.
Now, however, I must plunge into the tricky waters of reviewing him,
because Sniatowski has raised the stakes by inventing Treehouse
toshowcase the enormous talents of chef Tri Du.
Treehouse is on the second floor of the
office building whose ground floor houses Kaizen. I enter via a
heavy glass door to take a zippy elevator. Upstairs, I am face to
face with a sumptuous bar in a foyer that isspacious and intimate
all at once. There are playfully bold decorator touches - deep
colours, complex lighting, speckled marble, gold-leaf - touches
that would seem random and nonsensical were they the work ofanyone
less than the fabulous Andreas Escobar, one of the city's foremost
interiordesigners.
Off to the edges, there are private-dining
tatami rooms more or less in the traditional Japanese pattern, and
in the front, with a view of all Westmount, a pleasant corporate
lunch room that shuts out the rest of the world. This room is
dedicated to Donald K. Donald and is apparently ideal for hashing
out rock-concert deals.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, the entire
back half of the space is the dining room proper. It ishighlighted
by a wall-to-wall sushi bar, where Tri presides over a
display-fridge full of the freshest and most precious sea-products
money can buy.
Tri is no ordinary chef. He's an
all-Québécois success story. Part of the Vietnamese boat people
diaspora, he inched his way to this country after the haphazard sail
through the South Seas and a harrowing stay in a Philippines
outpost. Once here, he worked at a Lac-Saint-Jean farm before
descending on Montreal and learning pastry-making and then
sushi-making, courtesy of Alan Lieberman's Croissanterie, and then
the erstwhile Sushi Bar on St. Laurent Blvd. Since then, he has
married a Victoriaville native, had two children, starred as a
local sushi uber-chef and finally hooked up with Sniatowski, first
at Kaizen, now as the master of the Treehouse, named after him, but
misspelled to avoid being pronounced "try-house."
Tri is an
inventor and a maverick. He's free of blind devotion to convention.
He understands the crux of Japanese cuisine - its worship of fragile
beauty and its attempt to echo the wonders of nature. But he goes
beyond. He stretches the concept of sushi to its limits, while
fusing it with Pan-Asian influences.
Yes, I can have normal sushi and sashimi at
Treehouse, but why should I bother? If I let loose, I'll be dazzled
and go home a better person. Instead of the normal salmon-roe
caviar, Tri uses trout roe. It has a smaller grain, is less salty
and has a sweeter flavour.
Alongside red tobiko (flying-fish roe), Tri
has found black tobiko, which tastes like real caviar. Speaking of
real, the chef offers Russian caviar with an escalating tariff: by
the ounce, sevruga is $33, osietra $49, and beluga, $69.
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Tuna can be had in the usual maguro (red) and
toro (belly), as well as smoked, and also minced and combined with
tempura bits, red tobiko and wasabi sauce that leaves me breathless.
This is a far cry from any tuna I've ever had.
Like all sushi moderns, Tri has designed very
personal maki sushis, combining several ingredients with rice,
rolled in (or out) of seaweed and sliced into intriguing circles. I
start with the Blue Note maki, named after the famed New York jazz
joint, to celebrate the Kaizen empire's accent on jazz, canned and
also live (downstairs Sunday to Tuesday nights).
The jazzy maki marries spicy tuna with sliced
tuna, salmon, whitefish and avocado. In appearance it's like one of
the more cerebral phrases of Coltrane, but goes down as smooth as
Oscar Peterson.
Kaizen maki adds melon to eel, tobiko and
cucumber for a tropical look and clean taste. Toro-hamachi rainbow
puts a twist on the notion of draping fish outside the roll by using
the prized yellowtail and tuna-belly. It is very
luxurious.
Local sushi greats are also fond of creating
rice-less makis, called sashimi rolls. Tri sets a new standard for
this practice, with his Eye of the Dragon, a clever interplay of a
sheet of fresh daikon-radish around salmon, squid (ika) and tobiko,
with a wheel of scallion as the central punctuation. All these are
wrapped in seaweed and dipped in a light batter, to be quick-fried.
The result is then sliced into a flower patternand served on a spicy
sauce. Exquisite.
Tri even makes art of a simple barbecued eel
(unagi) hand-roll, by adding avocado, tobiko, wasabi
sauce and the usual caramel sauce. A golden couple of mouthfuls;
a perfect dessert.
On a second visit, I order the "chef's
choice" Omakase, Tri's version of a whimsical series of dishes, some
cold, some cooked, in the tradition of Vancouver's well-regarded
Tojo and New York's even more famous Nobu. This meal costs $60 per
person and affords an entertaining sampling from the menu as
well assurprises. I get a lovely feast of many deluxe tastes and a
pleasant, not over-full sensation at the end. It starts with
delicate raw tuna and halibut petals on a special sauce spiked with
crisped garlic. This is followed by a tuna tartar in a creamy
sauce of miso and wasabi as well as a spoonful of caviar.
Fresh crab wrapped in daikon and served on a
fiery sauce with fried yam threads paves the way to jumbo shrimps
poached in sake and served on spicily dressed salad. A Blue Note
maki from the sushi bar rounds out this part of the menu.
Marinated and grilled filet mignon tataki
brings in the last round, with a surprise ending of a-first-in-town
sea-urchin (uni) tempura. The creamy eggs of the faraway echinoderm,
wrapped in shiso (mint) and seaweed, are battered and flash fried.
Extraordinary and revelatory. Also firsts in Montreal are the
related (à la carte) tempuras of glistening duck foie gras, and
textured lobster.
As if all this were not enough reason to rush
up to Treehouse, there are also the satisfying yet light finales of
dessert chef Hélène Arseneau. Sweet nibbles of properly caramelized
Chinese pear tatin, and a trio of satin- smooth crème brûlées,
flavoured respectively with star anis, Caribbean chocolate and
Banyuls sweet-wine.
Treehouse is a tasteful, very appetizing
escapade into the culinary adventures of a marvellous chef. It is a
truly worthwhile extravagance, which I'd recommend whoever the
owner. |